Posts Tagged ‘user-centric’

Pinking

I just sat through a live webinar hosted by FEI – Front End of Innovation titled “Womenomic Meet Design: A Female innovation Strategy.” It was a presentation about the findings of a 3 year research project titled “Female Interaction,” a multidisciplinary research project focusing on female interaction design for advanced electronic products. If you haven’t heard about it, it’s quite facinating. You can check out more information on their site.

While the information was great, my key takeaway wasn’t an insight or idea, but rather a term: Pinking.

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Foraging

Seth Godin recently shared his thoughts on how the mathematical concept of the Levy Flight is now showing up in marketing and social media. If you don’t know what that is, please check out his post for details. It’s worth the read. But as a quick recap in Mr. Godin’s words:

“An animal that forages will hang out in a small area, looking for nuts or berries, then will realize it has used up all the likely sources in this spot. It will then head off in a random direction, walk many paces, and start foraging again.”

He goes on to point out the similarity between this behavior and how people engage with, well, everything. You find something you like, you hang out, play, invite others into it, get bored, value dissipates, you move on. He states this may be a great insight to consumer behavior. I agree. But what do we do with it?

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The day that strategy died

Last week I sat listening to a sales pitch. The subject: document handling. The young woman giving the sales pitch had all the prerequisites: friendly, articulate, earnest (great shoes, too). But something unnerved me. Throughout her spiel, she kept using the term strategic to describe how her company approached document handling versus the competition. And all I could think was, if strategic is used to sell document handling, what meaning does it have left anymore?

In all fairness, maybe a document handling company’s approach can be strategic. As a start-up, we’re not in the position to buy a strategic solution, so I was naturally a bit detached. I guess buying a copier, laser printer, scanner, and phone system separately would be considered tactical. But does buying them all from one source make it more of a strategic purchase? So while sitting there in my chair, sipping ice coffee and nodding attentively, I had a brief out of body experience. I found myself thinking: Is this what the majority of the digital industry has started to sound like?

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